Wednesday, 26 February 2014

SWP: The party of god - Wildcat

Another event that was closely tied to the Iranian Revolution was the first Gulf War (Iran vs Iraq) from 1980 to 1988 the war devastated both nations killed over a million (approx 1,250,000) and allowed both regimes to tighten there stranglehold upon both nations. As is usual in war their were two powerful and ruthless elites throwing thousands of young men into a bloody grinder, with frequent spill overs into cities.

And both sides received extensive support and equipment from all the major and not so major powers, to keep the war going. Most of nations proved quite capable businessmen and supplied both sides.

SWP has a bit of a tradition of supporting brutal movements.

However in lefty circles most parties and groups took a plague on both your houses approach and worked towards supporting refugees and demonstrations for cease fires and peace talks. Still a few were more partisan, unsurprisingly one of the most notable was the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) they rushed to the defence of the Ayatollah.

Leaflet produced by Wildcat in 1988 concerning
the First Gulf War (that is, Iran versus Iraq). It compares the position
of the Socialist Workers Party in the UK with that of Hezbollah. Not
unreasonable, given that the SWP supported the Iranian regime at the
time!

When it comes down to it there is little difference between the
position of the SWP on the Gulf War and that of Hezbollah. Both call for
the working class to rally to the support of the Iranian regime and
fight imperialism.

The working class has taken a different position, one of class
struggle against the war. In Iran there have been strikes,
demonstrations and riots against the war. In Iraq the struggle is much
more fierce, the army is mutinous and the workers are defending
themselves from the austerity measures which the war has forced upon
them. Conditions are certainly right for revolutionaries in Iran to call
on workers to follow the example of their class brothers and sisters in
Iraq.
So what advice has the "revolutionary party" got to give to the
Iranian workers? "We have no choice but to support the Khomeini regime",
"There will be instances when it is wrong to strike", "Socialists
should not call for the disruption of military supplies to the front...
they should not support actions which could lead to the collapse of the
military effort".

If the working class in Iran was to follow the line of the Socialist
Workers Party, it would be abandoning not only one of its most powerful
weapons (the strike) but it would also be giving up its political
independence from capital and the state. Any support for the defence of
the nation cannot help but damage the interests of the working class.
Re-enforcement of the notions of patriotism (even when cloaked in
anti-imperialism) is a clear step away from internationalism, and
another obstacle to fraternisation between conscripts.

The SWP claim to belong to the Leninist tradition of the Third
International, a section of those who broke away from social democracy
over its support for the butchery of the international working class in
the 1914-18 war. In reality however their ideas are much closer to those
of Karl Kautsky in their use of leftist language to justify a
capitalist war.

Since the end of the First World War, those who follow the ideology
of Lenin have found it necessary to support every capitalist war in the
name of workers internationalism.

From Trotsky lining up with Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill (the
perpetrators of the murder of 3 million Indians and countless other
atrocities in the colonies, the butchers of Dresden, Hiroshima and
Nagasaki...) in the name of protecting democracy from fascist barbarism;
through Korea, Vietnam, the Israeli/Arab war; to the SWP who are now
making their excuses for supporting wholesale mass murder in the Gulf,
by whimpering that because "Imperialism is not neutral in the Gulf
conflict nor can socialists be neutral. We must be prepared to back Iran
against the West."

For us as communists, there is no question of neutrality - we back
the proletariat against the bourgeoisie every time. It matters not how
leftists from Kautsky to Cliff dress up their support for bourgeois
states in revolutionary language, objectively they are the enemies of
the working class, just as much as the states they support.

The ideas that dominate the “thinking” of the SWP on this issue stem
from Lenin's theory of imperialism and his position on revolutionary
defeatism.

The theory of imperialism maintains that the world is split into big
imperialist powers (like America), and small oppressed nations (like
Iran). The workers must line up alongside the oppressed nations against
"today's main enemy" Imperialism. To this we reply that we care not if
America is the “big bully” attacking “poor little Iran”, the workers
have no country. We have no interest in propping up the reactionary
regime in Iran, of worker's corpses on the battlefield. We have no
interest in tying the workers of Iran to the Islamic war machine, or of
raising the prestige of Islamic fundamentalism throughout the Middle
East.

Luckily most workers ate not stupid enough to take any notice of this
senile strategy. Otherwise all a small state with domestic problems
would have to do, would be to ask the Americans to send in a few marines
“against them”. And the workers, urged on by the socialists, would
forget all about the class struggle and rush to the defence of the
state!

The slogan of "revolutionary defeatism" is another of Lenin's
misunderstandings. He said that revolutionaries cannot help wishing for
the defeat of “their own” country in a reactionary war. Apart from the
ambiguity in this (it could easily be taken by counter-revolutionaries,
such as the RCP, to mean supporting the opposing country), it is not
true. Revolutionaries in France in 1940, particularly Jewish ones, could
quite easily NOT "help wishing" for a Nazi victory.

The main enemy is not at home. Our rulers threaten to make us die
fighting for their interests, but the other side will kill us as well.
We don't care which side is overthrown by revolution first, and, unlike
the Bolsheviks, we do not believe in making peace with Capitalist
butchers, but in spreading civil war into their armies.

The main enemy is international capital which, like the workers, has
no country. Supporting any of its factions can only lead revolutionaries
to defeat.

While obviously we are against the capitalist war, we are also
against “capitalist peace”. The west wants peace in the Gulf, a “Pax
Americana” of unchallenged western hegemony, misery and exploitation. A
reopening of free trade, a working class peacefully putting up with its
exploitation, and a large piece of the profits.

For the working class this offers nothing. The bosses' choice of peace or war does not contain the answer we want.

In Iran and Iraq, unlike Britain, the class struggle has moved into a
higher stage than a purely economic one. Therefore when we intervene in
worker's struggles now, we should not just make the point that the only
way to win is to extend the struggle, it must also be with an
explicitly internationalist message. The working class has no interests
in common
with the bourgeoisie anywhere in the world. Whilst supporting all acts
of rebellion we should never forget that only a full scale revolution
which aims to internationalise itself will suffice. We must be prepared
to throw out the mistakes of past revolutionaries and fearlessly
criticise our own failings.
"The nationality of the worker is neither French, English or German, it is work, free slavery... to haggle over ones self.

The workers' government is neither French, English or German, it is Capital.
The home and atmosphere is neither French, English or German, it is the atmosphere of the factory.
"The ground that belongs to them is neither French, English or German... it is six feet under the ground."
Karl Marx, 1845

It is hard to believe that the gurus of the SWP are so stupid that
143 years on, they still haven't realised that this is applicable to
other countries. not. just. France. England and Germany.Wildcat, July 1988